I know this time of the
year is when the fishing kind of slows down for some of us and we become
involved in other things that will occupy us until spring. As most of you
know I am a big movie buff, whether it is your traditional movie or
documentaries concerning history or the outdoors. I also get a lot of enjoyment
from watching fly fishing videos. While viewing a fly fishing video the other
day involving fishing the Mayfly I discover a gold mine of information from the
website On Stream Guide. Be prepared to spend some time on this site covering a
lot of fly fishing information.
Another pastime of mine is
watching good documentaries from the History and National Geographic channels.
A few of my favorites are:
The Civil War ---150th
Edition----The documentary traces the causes, courses as well as the major events and
personalities of the American Civil War. Between 1861 and 1865, this epic
American story of struggle and survival was written in blood, and in this
series is told mostly from first-hand accounts and in the spoken words of the
participants themselves, through their diaries, letters, and memoirs. The
series concludes with Lee's surrender at Appomattox Court House and the surrender of the western
Confederate Army to Sherman in North Carolina in the spring of 1865. It then explores
the legacy of slavery and the consequences and meaning of a war that
transformed the country forever.
America Before Columbus---History books traditionally depict the pre-Columbus Americas as a pristine wilderness where small
native villages lived in harmony with nature. But scientific evidence tells a
very different story: When Columbus stepped ashore in 1492, millions of
people were already living there. America wasn't exactly a "New World," but a very old one whose
inhabitants had built a vast infrastructure of cities, orchards, canals, and
causeways. But after Columbus set foot in the Americas, an endless wave of
explorers, conquistadors, and settlers arrived, and with each of their ships came
a Noah's Ark of plants, animals—and disease. In the first 100 years of contact,
entire civilizations were wiped out and the landscape was changed forever.
Trail of Tears---President Andrew Jackson enacted the Indian Removal Act which forced
the Cherokee Nation to leave their homeland and relocate into unchartered
territory. Many of these forced settlers suffered from exposure, disease and
starvation and upon arriving in Indian Territory, they arrived with no past and no
future.
First Landing---The Voyage
from England to Jamestown
First Landing
unearths the untold story of Robert Hunt's incredible sacrifice as expedition
chaplain of the Virginia Company's awe-inspiring voyage to the New World - a
groundbreaking trip that would result in America's first permanent English
settlement in Jamestown, Virginia. The story follows Hunt's struggle to leave
his young family in order to make the arduous journey by sea in 1606. While
most men looked to their own needs, Hunt brought much-needed unity to the frail
outpost on the James River that would in time become the United States of America.
The Oregon Trail Find out what it was like for the pioneers who made the daring
journey across the Rocky Mountains to settle the Oregon Territory. Hear their stories of bravery,
excitement, tragedy, and sorrow from their actual letters and diary entries. Why
were they going? What did they bring? What did they have to leave behind?
Travel The Oregon Trail as they did across the plains, through the mountains and
into a brand new world.
As I get older I find
myself watching less and less commercial television. Programs that interest me
fifteen years ago or more just doesn’t whole my attention anymore.